Before I ordered the unit, I called several friends that use the Alpha. They gave me their honest opinions, good and bad. Frankly, there were very few bad comments- but I'll cover them in a bit.

I've used my units hard for the last several months. The terrain has been open prairie, thick Wisconsin woods, rolling sand hills in Oklahoma, mixed hardwood bottoms in Nebraska and grassy plains in South Dakota. Through it all, I never had an issue with my dogs losing contact. I did have a few 1.5 mile casts involved and several times one of my pups decided to head out 600+ yards. You cannot imagine how good it feels to be able to track a bird dog who gets an occasional boneheaded idea to go exploring! I say that to say my dogs are not the "stay within gun range" type of bird dog. They are bred to be hard-charging, bird-finding athletes and, for Brittanies, they do an exceptional job. They put a lot of wear and tear on a unit.

Pearl with Nebraska Pheasant (B/F/14 mos.)

I was initially concerned about the long, whip antenna on the collar. In fact, I called Garmin asking about it and if they had any complaints about the antenna cracking or becoming damaged in any way. I had that happen on one of their older DC-40 collars and it was a bugger to figure out why the range dropped suddenly. You can see in the picture above, the braided steel antenna in relation to the dog. I've had no problems at all with the mechanical aspect of the collars. I'm glad they put the GPS receiver on the top of the collar, again. (Duh!) These collars not only use the US GPS system but the Russian Glonass system, as well. This enables them to lock on faster and stay locked on, the book tells us. They have a 9 mile range and a "rescue" mode that will drop the updates to the handheld to every 2 minutes (regardless of the setting) if the battery gets below 25% of full charge. That will extend the battery life to enable you to find your dog. Also, when the dog goes out of range, a "waypoint" is marked, so you can go to that point and, perhaps, pick him up again. The collar also has an integral LED beacon light, which might be useful in low light conditions (such as returning from the 4 miles you worked chasing those Chukar right at sunset!). Of course, it's waterproof unless Fido decides dive deeper than 33 ft.

Cap (top) and Ruby after a Montana cast for Huns and Sharpies

The handheld is really the heart of the system. It is a touchscreen. You can track your dog and it incorporates the Garmin Trashbreaker technology in to it, as well. The three programmable mechanical buttons at the top of the unit will activated the ecollar. I set mine up as Tone Only, Continuous 2 and Continuous 4. I use the tone for recall. You can also program in Vibration as a command which might have an application when you want to be really stealthy. The system is amazingly versatile and I won't touch on everything. Here's some Cool Stuff: Put your dogs and your partners dogs on the screen. Also, put your partner on the screen. Send him messages (pre-loaded) like "go on with out me" or "HELP". Comes with a good TOPO map installed and you can load "birdseye" imagery on the screen. There is a chip holder under the battery that will hold other hunting maps, such as Hunting GPS Maps (http://www.huntinggpsmaps.com/gps-maps#.VHSq8IvF-ls). The battery is charged up using a USB port and comes with wall prongs and 12V adapter. The collars charge the same way through another adapter. No more disposable batteries. I've found the collars to last several days and the handheld to last a few days as well. If you are like me, you will charge them in the truck at the end of the day and have them fully charged the next day. It's all waterproof.

OK, now for the "not so good". This is a touchscreen and it may be glove-friendly, but several times I needed to know what my dog was doing right then and was fumbling with the screen and my gloves trying to change screens. I ended up pulling my glove off, selecting the screen I wanted, putting the glove back on, etc. It happened enough to be annoying. The screen will work with gloves, but without the flexibility you would normally expect. Another item I think you should be aware of is that the stimulation buttons may change settings by being bumped or having the screen touched inadvertently. There is a way to Lock the screen (by pressing the power button once- this is how you check the battery level, too!- and selecting the lock icon.) and then you can assure yourself the proper simulations are set. I got in to the habit of checking visually what the setting was before pressing the stimulation buttons. Only once, in the hundreds of hours I used the units, could it have been a problem, and I caught it by looking first. Also, these things are not cheap! It took me pretty close to $1200 to open the boxes.

Overall, my recommendation is this is a great unit with tremendous potential. I do not use it to train. I have a Tritronics unit for that. This is a tracking collar with the capability to remind Bowser to pay attention. And, it removes one more item off his neck! If this fits your style of hunting, the unit is a great machine- A BUY! To be honest, I will NOT put one of my dogs on the ground without some type of tracking collar. This is top-of-the-line.

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

If your trip consists of days like those above, with mornings in the 30's and afternoons in the 50's, any old bird hunting outfit will do. Filson, Orvis, etc will gladly sell you some topnotch stuff. A nice wool sweater over a t-shirt, all under a nice jacket coupled with brier pants or jeans and chaps and some comfortable boots will do the job. This trip to Oklahoma was just such weather. The habitat was perfect and the birds were there. (In the picture above, just up the gully to the right, was a huge covey of Bobwhites that we took a few out of.)

Shack and some of the 4 coveys he pointed.

I hunted the puppies, Shack and Pearl, a lot. It was pretty benign territory with the only downside being the sand spurs. When they got thick, I booted the dogs and we were good to go! They got a lot of work on big coveys of Bobs and made some really nice points and retrieves.

Pearl and her first wild Bob.

They both matured a lot in those few days. Mainly, they biggest challenge for me was keeping them hydrated! The WMA's in OK have plenty of water scattered around for the dogs.

Cap on a nice covey of Bobs

But, then, we moved to Nebraska for a little pheasant hunting. As we crossed Kansas, we drove in to an arctic front swinging down from Canada. The wind shifted, the temp dropped and I began to wonder if I carried enough cold weather clothing!

Pearl with her first pheasant retrieve.

The next morning, near Norfolk, NE, the temperature was 7 deg. and the wind was howling. The windchill was well below zero. It was colder than a well-diggers hind end and I was scrambling for clothes. A cotton shirt under a wool shirt under a wool sweater under a windproof coat, was the order of the day. An Elmer Fudd wool hat and two layers of gloves, windproof/waterproof pants from LLBean, wool socks, good boots and gaiters to keep the snow out of my boots rounded out the ensemble. And still I was cold!

Pearl and her limit of pheasant!

My biggest problem was my hands. I wore silk liners under deerskin leather shooting gloves. My hands would just not warm up! The first pointed rooster I shot at laughed all the way to the treeline as I pulled the gun up and, with the gun mismounted due to all the clothing, shot three times. My dog, Ace, an old hand at this, was not amused at all! But, my hands did warm up and I did adjust my gun mount to clothing and we did manage to take our limit. My recommendation for cold hands is to buy the chemical heating pads that are commercially available and insert them in the glove. I tried putting them in my palm and that worked fine. Then I put them on the top of my hand, between the layers of gloves, resting just behind the knuckles. That location seemed to work best for me. You get 10 hours of heat out of them and they should help cure the cold hands syndrome.

Another thing I learned is this: don't leave home without warm hunting gear, regardless of the weather where you live! I really was lucky in that I keep appropriate gear stowed in The Beast for just such an eventuality. It sure beats an emergency trip to Wally World!

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Here, in Woodward, OK, the temptation was great to turn south to Wally World and the strip fast food joints. Old town was north and the Beast knew the way. A local cafe is the best breakfast with the most news and is way more fitting to a bird hunting trip. Pull-in parking, booths and a counter with swivel seats, waitresses ('servers taking care of me' need not apply) that have coffee on the table almost before I get comfy. She's fast and has no time for "California ordering". Lots of ball caps and old men discussing crops or the football team or politics.

This is flyover country. Mocked, sneered at (sometimes with a mouth full of food- ironic!), not worth thinking about to many. This is the oil patch and cattle country. There are lots of hardworking men driving big trucks and cussing and knocking dust off their jeans before they come in.

While last year's Miss Oklahoma explains the weather on the TV, conversation is varied and lively as the coffee kicks in.

I do like the old Cafe. It's survival is assured, as long as there are working men and women in small towns. It's part of the fabric of our country.

May I recommend the "Thunder Omelette' with daily-made, fresh salsa!

I'm off to chase Mr. Bob. First up is my main man, Ace. His co-star this morning will be my puppy, Shack. Stay tuned!

Bird Dogs and Bird Hunting

After more than 20 years of bird dogs and bird hunting, I was able to free myself of the day to day "making a living" that is the curse of all those men and women to whom bird dogs and bird hunting is a way of life. Traveling around the country, from September to March, I indulge my passion for bird dogs and bird hunting with my Brittany bird dogs. Recently, I added to the pack by keeping 2 pups from the last litter of 11 that Ace and Ruby had. While having 4 dogs and traveling the country can be problematic, I've noticed I don't need to worry as much about "running out of dogs" before the trip is complete. With a little prevention, care and planning, I can rest dogs 1 day in 3 and still have 2 on the ground in the morning and 2 more in the afternoon. In the event a dog is laid up (cut pad, intestinal distress) another dog can step up. Bird dogs and bird hunting will make you a tremendous manpower (dog power) planner!

Another beneficial side effect is the planning of actual trips and times of the year. As an example, September is my traditional Montana Sharptail and Hungarian Partridge month. Great birds for the pups, they hold tight and live in easy country, It's a good way to get the dogs back in to "hunting" mode. October is Pheasant and Ruffed Grouse month. Usually the Dakotas and either Wisconsin or Minnesota will get a visit from the Brittany pack. In November, my bird dogs and bird hunting show will visit quail states like Oklahoma, New Mexico, Kansas, Texas and Arizona. December will be the Mearns Quail deployment to mountains of Southern Arizona followed by Gambles Quail in Arizona and Blue Quail in New Mexico. January is a toss up and for the last several years has been Nebraska for pheasant, Oklahoma for Bob Whites, Arizona for Gambels and New Mexico for Blues (again). However, I've been known to head to Idaho for Valley Quail and Chukar.

In February, in order to instill some discipline and keep the boys and girls in top form, I start hitting the NSTRA Field Trials real hard, with an eye to the National Trials in February, April and May.

While I know this schedule with my bird dogs and bird hunting looks to be excessive, I look at it like a cup of water with small leak. I'm not getting any younger and the water in the cup is the time I have left. Thank God, I'm in excellent health (no thanks to my younger years) and still have the drive to chase the Chukar and Huns, but time will advance none-the-less and before too long, I will be remembering and wishing instead loading up the Beast of Birdin' with dog boxes and shotgun shells.

This BLOG is a way for me to document my fun with bird dogs and bird hunting. I can also look at products and test them on the road, under actual hunting conditions. I enjoy doing that and I've found some real gems in equipment and techniques.